Monday, September 12, 2016

Sitecore CMS Active Directory Module and LDAP integration.

Introduction

I'm not going to reinvent the wheel. The idea is to help fellow developer to troubleshoot and few show stoppers that can come as a problem during integration of ldap to sitecore AD Module. I just try to put my experience altogether so as to address some issues and useful tool that can help you get started.

Use Cases

Enabling LDAP authentication in content authoring aka CMS system will provide additional level of security access control in place. This will ensure limited access and no misuse even we have CMS -CA accessible only to internal network non accessible publicly.

Assumption:

You've LDAP /AD account in place. Say. There is dev, test and prod group account created in AD. To each of these group set of AD users are assigned. Each of these group must be assigned with Service account say sv_dev_user.and so on. The Service account act as primary source of authentication to allow any external system seek access to AD group. Later it will enable set of users to access application or system.

***Facts About:AD Service Account Vs AD User Account

In certain scenarios we have systems running under AD Credentials (i.e. under a Service Account). These Service Accounts are created in exactly the same way as user accounts; the only difference being the name and description. A few things have been done to make a distinction between the two account types (e.g. which OU the account is in, whether "password never expires" is enabled, if "service account" is in the description), but there's no one rule which can be applied to everything to clearly distinguish between the two.

How to get Started?

Troubleshooting?

1. OU Group wrongly used in LDAP Connection string?

Always look at the right form of LDAP connection string. 99% of the cases Ldap connection is wrongly used in terms of OU group. There may be nested OU group. The best way to figure out OU group is use LDAPAdmin.exe. Check download section.

Connect LdapAdmin with service account userId and pwd. Once connected to LDAPAdmin try to locate AD Group and take one member(user) of that group and check its property . You can easily find the right hierarchy of OU aswell as right OU group.

6. Domain: Check CustomAD Domain appeared!

7. Role Manager: Assign Sitecore Role to User

8. Finally Login with AD user account

Ensure you using the domain name that you added as one of the membership provider. say you got domain name mydomain and you have used membership provider as below. Then you should login with customAD\UserId

Last but not the least

If you unable to get any lead. Enable debug mode to true in ldap.config

Open the /App_Config/Include/ldap.config file, locate the LDAP.Debug setting and set it to true.

This setting is set to false by default. When the changes to the pluggable .config file are applied immediately, the next request to the module will dump much more information to the Sitecore CMS log file.